Phase behavior and complex crystal structures of self-assembled tethered nanoparticle telechelics.

Nano Lett

Materials Science and Engineering, ‡Department of Applied Physics, and §Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, United States.

Published: March 2015

Motivated by growing interest in the self-assembly of nanoparticles for applications such as photonics, organic photovoltaics, and DNA-assisted designer crystals, we explore the phase behavior of tethered spherical nanoparticles. Here, a polymer tether is used to geometrically constrain a pair of nanoparticles creating a tethered nanoparticle "telechelic". Using simulation, we examine how varying architectural features, such as the size ratio of the two end-group nanospheres and the length of the flexible tether, affects the self-assembled morphologies. We demonstrate not only that this hybrid building block maintains the same phase diversity as linear triblock copolymers, allowing for a variety of nanoparticle materials to replace polymer blocks, but also that new structures not previously reported are accessible. Our findings imply a robust underlying ordering mechanism is common among these systems, thus allowing flexibility in synthesis approaches to achieve a target morphology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl500236bDOI Listing

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